Trinity Mount Ministries

Showing posts with label Trinity Mount Ministries Website. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Trinity Mount Ministries Website. Show all posts

Saturday, October 27, 2012

Girls returned safely to parents - Sacramento, CA:

KCRA

Cops find missing girls in Sac; pimping, pandering charges follow

Girls returned safely to parents

 UPDATED 11:05 AM PDT Oct 27, 2012

SACRAMENTO, Calif. (KCRA) —
Police arrested two people on charges related to pimping and pandering after officers found two missing girls.
Officers with the Sacramento Police Department said they received reports of two missing girls seen staying in the 1400 block of 30th Street about 10:36 p.m. Monday.
Investigators said once they arrived at the scene, they determined the girls had been reported missing from out of state.
The parents of the girls were called -- then flown to Sacramento to take custody.
Sacramento police detectives who also serve in the FBI Crimes Against Children Task Force investigated the incident.
Police said it was determined that 30-year-old Roshann Harris and 24-year-old Jason Wilson had befriended the two girls, and are suspected of pimping and pandering.
Harris and Wilson were located Wednesday and taken into custody, police said.


Read more: http://www.kcra.com/news/Cops-find-missing-girls-in-Sac-pimping-pandering-charges-follow/-/11797728/17158396/-/rr0mi3/-/index.html#ixzz2AYH7AofM



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Hospital baby-lifting: In search of the lost children:

Hospital baby-lifting: In search of the lost children

Published: Sunday, Oct 28, 2012, 2:02 IST
By Santosh Andhale | Place: Mumbai | Agency: DNA

For the last ten years, Prakash Chauhan, 32, and his wife Vidya, 29, have celebrated the birthday of their child on January 12. But their child is not present, for the couple lost their baby boy two days after he was born, at JJ Hospital in 2003. The child went missing from the maternity ward and though a police complaint was filed, nothing came of it. The couple, who live in Dongri with their two children, remain hopeful that one day, their child will return home.
Four years ago, Mohini Nerurkar’s three-day-old baby was stolen from Sion Hospital. The Nerurkars are still fighting with the hospital administration in the hope of being reunited with their child. This week, Jasmin Naik’s day-old boy was kidnapped from theNowrosjee Wadia Maternity Hospital.
“When your child is kidnapped, you always hope that maybe your child is alive and will return home. On this hope, the family passes its days,” says Vidya, who works as a computer operator in a private firm. “You can’t concentrate on work or anything else, because your thoughts are always on your child. Where is he? What is he doing? Is he safe or not?”
Vidya hopes that the government implements rules and regulations for maternity wards which would be implemented strictly. “Most baby kidnappings happen in government-run and civic-run hospitals,” she says. “They should implement rules such as compulsory 24-hour security outside the ward, and only allowing relatives inside the ward.”
Dr Yusuf Matheswala, a senior psychiatrist at Masina Hospital says that a family in such a situation would be in urgent need of counselling and psychological therapy. “When there is a death, after a period of time the family returns to its usual routines. But in such a situation, when the baby has been stolen, the mother is unable to accept reality, and continue to hope that the child will return. Their lives are completely disturbed.”
Prakash and Vidya had their second child two years after their first-born was taken from them. Despite their past experiences, Vidya insisted on delivering her second child at JJ Hospital. Their son Jitesh is now in the third standard, and his parents watch over him anxiously.
“Our first son, Aditya, would have been ten in January,” says Prakash. “We don’t know where he is, but we pray that god will take care of our child.”
Prakash is unable to understand how such incidents happen repeatedly. “Why don’t the state and the BMC take strong security measures? If the authorities had taken strict action in our case, maybe another child would not have been stolen.”
Slums, shrines on police radar
In their latest move towards getting leads in the kidnapping case of the one-day-old baby from Nowrosjee Wadia Hospital on Thursday, the police have asked their informants to keep a close tab in the neighbouring slum areas. Police suspect that the accused woman might have taken the child back to her home.
“Because of the close proximity in slums, neighbours know when someone visits a nearby home. If the woman was a resident and took the child home even for a few hours, it won’t be difficult to track her down,” said an officer from the crime branch.
Police teams have also been sent to important shrines in Maharashtra to check if the child has been sold off to any beggars’ gangs.
The police suspect that the accused woman is from western Gujarat. “Most of the cleaning staff in Wadia Hosptial are from this community. We are in the process of questioning some of the hospital workers,” said the police official.
—Little Yadav

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Friday, October 26, 2012

FBI This Week - Next Generation Cyber:


Podcasts and Radio

Next Generation Cyber

10/26/2012
Mollie Halpern: The FBI is enhancing its capabilities to combat the nation’s most serious cyber threat—criminals, spies, and terrorists breaking into government and private computer networks.
Richard A. McFeely: The intrusions are occurring 24/7, 365 days a year.
Halpern: I’m Mollie Halpern, and this is FBI, This Week. As part of its Next Generation Cyber Initiative, the FBI is dedicating more resources and building new tools to counter the threat. We’re also hiring more computer scientists and expanding a network of local cyber task forces. FBI Executive Assistant Director Richard McFeely says virtually everyone connected to the Internet will at some point have their computer attacked. He urges businesses to report intrusions to the FBI; for private citizens he advises:
McFeely: There is plenty of off-the-shelf antivirus software. You’ve got to have good firewalls set up, and make sure you’re downloading those security updates.
Halpern: October is National Cyber Security Awareness Month. For more tips on how to protect your wired and wireless devices, visit www.fbi.gov.


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Did Pornography Contribute to Jessica Ridgeway Killing?


Morality in Media Press Room

17-Year-Old Killer Addicted to Porn

Washington, DC (October 26, 2012) – Reports this week indicate that the killer of 10-year-old Jessica Ridgeway of Colorado, who disappeared on October 5 and whose dismembered body was found several days later, was a boy who was addicted to pornography.
“News that the boy accused of killing Jessica Ridgeway is addicted to pornography will come as no surprise to law enforcement agents with experience in sexual crimes,” said Patrick A. Trueman, President of Morality in Media and former chief of the U. S. Department of Justice Child Exploitation and Obscenity Section in Washington D. C.  “Pornography consumption causes addiction and leads many, children included, to sexual violence.  It’s high time the U. S. Government took the issue of pornography seriously again and began vigorously prosecuting the major producers and distributors of hardcore pornography,” he said.
The connection between pornography and sexual violence among minors has been clearly established.  Several peer-reviewed studies regarding this link are available on one of MIM’s popular websites, PornHarmsResearch.com.
The mother of the boy accused of this monstrous crime called police to say that her son, 17-year-old Austin Sigg, may have been the killer. News reports indicate that he has been treated for pornography addiction since he was just 15, so the question must be asked: Did pornography contribute to Jessica Ridgeway’s killing?
Sigg is the main suspect in another violent crime, an attempted rape on an adult jogger.  “We do not know and may never know exactly how much influence pornography played in these two crimes, but sexual crimes by minors do not happen in a vacuum – porn is almost always a significant contributing factor,” Trueman said.
“When the U. S. Department of Justice gave up enforcing federal pornography laws, it gave up on our children.  Now addiction, sexual experimentation mirroring scenes from violent porn videos, as well as sexual violence are all too common among children.  Child-on-child sexual crimes, once unheard of, are also on the rise,” said Trueman.  “The porn industry is directly responsible for these trends and the harm to our nation’s children.  But law enforcement officials, such as U. S. Attorney General Eric Holder, who refuse to enforce anti-pornography laws, designed to protect children and society from sexual predators, bear much responsibility also,” he continued.
Eric Holder is the first U. S. Attorney General in nearly thirty years to refuse to enforce federal pornography laws, which were passed by Congress over many years by wide bi-partisan margins. Federal laws prohibit distribution of obscene (hardcore) adult pornography on the Internet, on cable/satellite TV, on hotel/motel TV, in retail shops, and by common carrier, such as UPS.
About:
Founded in 1962, Morality in Media, Inc. is the leading organization focused on opposing pornography and indecency through public education and the application of the law. www.PornHarms.com.
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Thursday, October 25, 2012

Indictment in Alleged Child Pornography Case:


Indictment in Alleged Child Pornography Case:
October 25th, 2012


By Wendy Osher
A federal grand jury in Honolulu returned an indictment on Wednesday, charging John Ridgely Tucker, 56, with six counts of producing child pornography.
According to the indictment, Tucker allegedly used and enticed two minor children, to produce six images of child pornography in 2008.
According to an affidavit filed on October 11, 2012, in support of the complaint, the following assertions were made by US Attorney for the District of Hawai’i, Florence Nakakuni:
  • The FBI Honolulu Division initiated an investigation after receiving three images of child pornography from the National Center of Missing and Exploited Children. The images depicted two minor children engaged in sexually explicit conduct, and appeared to show a telephone book issued by Hawaiian Telephone Company for the Big Island of Hawaii.
  • In an unrelated case in Phoenix, Arizona, FBI agents recovered the same images, as well as an image of the two minors with an adult male.  The picture of the male was forwarded to the FBI Honolulu office, which put out a press release asking the public to identify him.
  • On October 10, 2012, the FBI received information identifying the adult male in the photos.
The grand jury indictment contains six charges, each of which carries a minimum penalty of 15 years in jail, and up to 30 years in prison, and a potential lifetime term of supervised release.
Officials with the US Department of Justice say the charges in the indictment are merely accusations, and Tucker is presumed innocent until proven guilty.
Tucker was arrested and ordered detained without bail.

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Missing boy found after 15 years:

WRBL News 3

Missing boy found after 15 years

By: LIZ BUCKTHORPE | via AP 




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Wednesday, October 24, 2012

Working Together to Help Drug Endangered Children:


October 24th, 2012 Posted by 
It is estimated that over 9 million children live in homes where a parent or other adult use illegal drugs. Children growing up in such a challenging environment are 3 times more likely to be verbally, physically, or sexually abused and 4 times more likely to be neglected.

This week, Deputy Attorney General James Cole, Community Oriented Policing Services Office Director Bernard Melekian, U.S. Attorney for the District of Kansas Barry Grissom, U.S. Attorney for the Southern District of Iowa, Nicholas Klinefeldt, and  interim U.S. Attorney for the Northern District of Iowa Sean Berry attended the National Alliance for Drug Endangered Children Conference in Des Moines, Iowa to support the efforts to find and help children growing up in dangerous drug environments.

Deputy Attorney General James Cole spoke with urgency about the importance and responsibility we have to ensure the justice, health and safety of these vulnerable young members of our communities:

This work is difficult and gut-wrenching. We cannot simply arrest and prosecute our way out of the growing epidemic of drug abuse, trafficking, and addiction by parents and childcare providers.   Saving these children requires a multi-disciplinary approach involving coordinated teams comprised of law enforcement, child protective services, healthcare professionals, educators, victim service specialists, child advocates, courts, and the community.   It requires all of us.

As Chairman of the Federal Interagency Task Force on Drug Endangered Children,  Deputy Attorney General Cole has led the efforts to raise awareness; increase coordination at the federal, state, tribal and local levels; and provide assistance to the field.

The DEC Task Force recently developed a combined resource CD for law enforcement and child welfare agencies; new training courses at the Federal Law Enforcement Training Center; and developed a drug endangered children resource website.

The National Alliance for Drug Endangered Children (National DEC) is one of the DEC Task Force’s best allies. This year they received a $1.2 million in grants from the department. With this funding, they’ve transformed from an informal association of state leaders to a national voice for training, technical assistance, and advocacy on behalf of abused and neglected children.
COPS Director Melekian:

The better the availability of training opportunities focused on identifying and helping drug endangered children, the better chance we have of making this a central part of law enforcement’s mission to serve and protect.  And it needs to be clear that there is an alternative to the violence and fear that is part of the daily lives of these children…With the right tools and information, we can reduce the incidences of children’s exposure to violence and intervene more effectively.

In addition to the national organization, state-level DEC groups are finding innovative solutions to share with their state and federal partners.

For example, the COPS Office awarded the Colorado Alliance for Drug Endangered Children funding to expand their Drug Endangered Children Tracking System (DECSYS).  DECSYS is an easy-to-use, web-based system that allows law enforcement and child protection agencies an automated process for identifying children at risk.

This can expedite the identification of children in danger and bring them the assistance they need.  In the last two years, DECSYS has been credited with a 150 percent increase in the number of drug endangered children identified for child protective services.  It will soon launch in Nevada and Wisconsin.
U.S. Attorney Grissom spoke about coordination and collaboration:

Our coordination and collaboration with the Southern District of Iowa and the National DEC Alliance serves as an example of the power of partnerships;  this training will encourage partnerships, and provide tools for law enforcement, victim service providers, medical personnel,  welfare workers, educators  and other professionals to protect our most valuable resource, our children. 
While investigation and  prosecution will be discussed at this conference, the conference will focus on the importance of partnerships to assure the safety of children, enforce state and federal laws, and identify alternatives to incarceration that are designed to maintain,  or reunite families.

By bringing together federal, state and local resources with advocates, experts and community leaders, we can raise awareness of the plight of drug endangered children nationwide. We can increase coordination and intervene early to stop the cycle of violence and ensure these vulnerable citizens have the bright future full of promise they deserve.

To learn more about Drug Endangered Children, visit justice.gov/dec.
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Justice Department Files Lawsuit in Mississippi to Protect the Constitutional Rights of Children:


Department of Justice
Office of Public Affairs
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Wednesday, October 24, 2012
Justice Department Files Lawsuit in Mississippi to Protect the Constitutional Rights of Children
Department Seeks Declaratory, Injunctive and Equitable Relief against City of Meridian, Lauderdale County and Mississippi Division of Youth Services
The Justice Department filed a lawsuit today against the city of Meridian, Miss.; Lauderdale County, Miss.; judges of the Lauderdale County Youth Court; and the state of Mississippi alleging that the defendants systematically violate the due process rights of juveniles.  

The litigation seeks remedies for violations of the Fourth, Fifth and 14th amendments of the U.S. Constitution.   The complaint alleges that the defendants help to operate a school-to-prison pipeline in which the rights of children in Meridian are repeatedly and routinely violated. As a result, children in Meridian have been systematically incarcerated for allegedly committing minor offenses, including school disciplinary infractions, and are punished disproportionately without due process of law.   The students most affected by this system are African-American children and children with disabilities. The practices that regularly violate the rights of children in Meridian include:

  • Children are handcuffed and arrested in school and incarcerated for days at a time without a probable cause hearing, regardless of the severity – or lack thereof – of  the alleged offense or probation violation.
  • Children who are incarcerated prior to adjudication in the Lauderdale County system regularly wait more than 48 hours for a probable cause hearing, in violation of federal constitutional requirements.
  • Children make admissions to formal charges without being advised of their Mirandarights and without making an informed waiver of those rights.
  • Lauderdale County does not consistently afford children meaningful representation by an attorney during the juvenile justice process, including in preparation for and during detention, adjudication and disposition hearings.
“ The department is bringing this lawsuit to ensure that all children are treated fairly and receive the fullest protection of the law,” said Thomas E. Perez, Assistant Attorney General for the Civil Rights Division.   “ It is in all of our best interests to ensure that children are not incarcerated for alleged minor infractions, and that police and courts meet their obligations to uphold children’s constitutional rights.” 

The department issued findings on Aug. 10, 2012 after a comprehensive investigation that began in December 2011.   The department found reasonable cause that the defendants were violating Section 14141 of the Violent Crime Control and Law Enforcement Act of 1994, which prohibits a pattern or practice of deprivation of civil rights in the administration of juvenile justice .   In its findings letter, the department stated its willingness to engage in meaningful negotiations to remedy the identified violations, but defendants did not timely engage in such negotiations.

“It is disappointing that the local and state government agencies involved in the administration of juvenile justice in Lauderdale County have not worked cooperatively with the Justice Department to resolve these violations,” said Gregory Davis, U.S. Attorney for the Southern District of Mississippi.   “The U.S. Attorney’s Office is committed to making sure that children in the Lauderdale County juvenile justice system are treated in accordance with the Constitution.” 

This investigation was conducted by the Civil Rights Division’s Special Litigation Section, working in conjunction  with the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the Southern District of Mississippi.  The Civil Rights Division’s Educational Opportunities Section also has a long-standing school desegregation case against the Meridian Public School District. The district is currently working cooperatively with the department to resolve issues in that case.

The Justice Department, including U.S. Attorney Gregory Davis and Deputy Assistant Attorney General Roy Austin, will be hosting a telephonic community conference call open to members of the public on Thursday, Oct. 25 from 7:30 – 8:30 p.m. CDT.   The purpose of this call is to provide community members with information about the investigation and complaint.   To participate in the call, dial the following toll-free number: 888-989-9731 and when prompted by the operator, provide your name and the pass code: 7015490.

12-1281
Civil Rights Division
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Tuesday, October 23, 2012

Workshop on Stopping Child Sexual Abuse:

CENTRAL JERSEY

   

OCT 23, 2012 9:56 AM


Mercer County to Host Workshop on Stopping Child Sexual Abuse

The Mercer County Commission on Abused, Neglected and Missing Children, in association with PEI Kids/Greater Mercer Coalition to Prevent Child Sexual Abuse, is hosting a daylong workshop on recognizing and reporting child sexual abuse, Nov. 1, 2012, beginning at 8:50 a.m. at the Mercer County Community College Conference Center
“Preventing Child Sexual Abuse: It’s Everyone’s Responsibility,” will feature experts and panelists who will discuss why businesses and organizations should have a child sexual abuse prevention policy; workshops on how to recognize and identify signs of abuse and abusers; how to address child on child abuse; cyber safety; and more.
Registration is $25 and includes continental breakfast, lunch and all materials.
The MCCC Conference Center is on the West Windsor Campus, 1200 Old Trenton Road, West Windsor, NJ 08550. For more information or to register, contact Yolanda Leon at (609) 989-6966 or by e-mail at yleon@mercercounty.org.



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Body of Missing 12-Year-Old NJ Girl Believed Found ...

NBC New York

Body of Missing 12-Year-Old NJ Girl Believed Found in Recycling Container: Official

Autumn Pasquale was reported missing from her Clayton home at 9:30 p.m. Saturday


By Brian Thompson and AP|  Tuesday, Oct 23, 2012  |  Updated 11:19 AM EDT








Photos released by Clayton, N.J. Police Department show Autumn Pasquale, 12, of Clayton, N.J.
The discovery of a girl's body in a home's recycling bin spread grief and fear Tuesday through a small town in southern New Jersey that had been desperately searching for a 12-year-old resident since she missed her curfew over the weekend.
Gloucester County Prosecutor Sean Dalton said the body of Autumn Pasquale was found around 10 p.m. Monday in the bin just blocks from her house and from Borough Hall, where thousands of people gathered earlier in the evening for a tearful candlelight vigil to pray for her safe return.
"The search for Autumn is over," he told a news conference Tuesday.
With autopsy results pending, he did not label the death a homicide. He said the investigation was just beginning and that there were no suspects.
If someone is found responsible for the death, "they don't deserve to be walking the streets," he said.
Dalton said Clayton was a safe community, but parents should continue to keep close watch on their children.
The girl's uncle, Paul Spadofora, gathered with other relatives at the news conference to thank the community for its help in the search. The victim's parents did not attend.
"We all have beautiful chlidren but there was something special about Autumn. She was an angel here on earth and she's an angel up in heaven," Spadofora said. "There's evil everywhere, even in the small town of Clayton. Out of evil will come good."
Crime scene investigators arrived shortly before 9 a.m. at the house where the body was found. Authorities have not said where on the property the recycling bin was found.
But Tuesday was trash collection day, and many residents had dragged their trash cans and recycling bins to the curb the night before. The covered recycling bins are collected by an automated truck that picks them up and dumps the contents into the back.
Police barricaded the block, and friends and neighbors came by to see. Some mothers said they were keeping their kids out of school for the day. Even before the body was found, students reported that Spirit Week had been canceled because of the sorrow.
One young man rode a bike up, sat on a porch of a home and cried, then biked away.
Clayton Mayor Thomas Bianco walked to the scene, cried, hugged a police officer and gave a brief statement to the gathered reporters.
"You hear about it in other places but never think it would happen in our little town," he said.
Howard Kowgill, 60, who lives in town and, like many, knows members of Autumn's family, said the discovery of the body changes the nature of the town.
"Until they find out who did it, you don't let your kids out," he said.
Authorities said Autumn, whose 13th birthday is next Monday, was last seen around 12:30 p.m. Saturday pedaling her white BMX bicycle away from the Clayton home where she lives with her father, her two siblings, her father's girlfriend and the girlfriend's children.
Relatives said they believed Autumn was heading to see a friend, and they became worried only after she did not return by her 8 p.m. curfew.
By Sunday morning, her disappearance became not only a crisis but a town-wide cause in Clayton, a town 25 miles south of Philadelphia. Volunteers by the hundred joined the search, scouring malls, nearby towns and passing out fliers.
By Monday evening, officials were thanking the volunteers for their help but asking them to call it a night.
Hundreds of people returned Monday for the vigil. The girl's great-uncle spoke, saying he hoped the town could gather again a week later, with Autumn back, with candles to mark her birthday.
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Police looking for missing El Monte mother and children:



Police looking for missing El Monte mother and children
Updated:   10/23/2012 02:48:15 AM PDT




Click photo to enlarge
Huizhen Hu, 39, was last seen by her husband the morning of Oct. 22.... (El Monte Police Department)
EL MONTE - El Monte police are asking for the public's help in locating a 39-year-old woman and her two younger children who didn't come home Monday.Relatives are concerned the woman might be having psychological problems, according to El Monte Police Lt. David Vautrin.
He said Huizhen Hu's husband last saw her, their 9-year-daughter, Yanwen Wu, and their 11-year-old son, Jujie Wu, at their home in the 11100 block of Concert Street when he left for work about 7:30 a.m.
On Monday afternoon, Vautrin said the children sent a text to their older sister saying they were at a friend's house in South El Monte and will be home shortly. They didn't come home.
Police verified the children went to school on Monday and were at the friend's house but left. Vautrin said the children might have used a friend's phone to send the message.
Hu's husband also found evidence she had been packing up personal belongings at the house, police said.
Vautrin said Hu has been in the U.S. a little over a year and doesn't have a cell phone, a car or extended family here.
Huizhen Hu has light complexion, black hair, brown eyes, weighs 75 pounds and doesn't speak English. She was last seen wearing a gray sweater with black sleeves.
Yanwen Wu has black hair, brown eyes and was garbed in a dark blue polo shirt and dark blue pants.
Jujie Wu has black hair, brown eyes, stands 4 feet 5 inches tall and weighs 75 pounds. He was wearing a light blue polo shirt and dark blue pants.

Anyone with information is asked to call the El Monte Police Department at 626-580-2100. Detective Jeff Girgle is the investigator assigned to the case.

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Welcome to NotFound.org. What is it?

brand-e
404 children

404 child not found

Welcome to NotFound.org. What is it? Well, it’s a joint initiative of Missing Children Europe and Child Focus, charities which support missing kids or those suffering from abuse. And they want website owners to take advantage of their dead digital assets by making use of their 404 ‘not found’ error pages.
On participating websites, visitors to such pages get to read the message ‘Page not found, neither is XX’ with the name of a missing child inserted. Plus there’s is a photo of the person along with the date he/she went missing.
At the moment, the app largely shows missing children in Belgium, but in the next few weeks, NotFound.org will add support for further European countries, with the US and Canada to follow later.
Brands onboard include media giant RTL and UK new media company Affinity, with the latter busy selling the idea on.
“We are in the process of contacting all of our clients that we have produced websites for and offering to update the code on their websites for free so that their 404 Page Not Found pages will publish data about children currently missing in Europe,” says Affinity.
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Monday, October 22, 2012

Fort Morgan Chief: Report Suspicious Activity Quickly



Fort Morgan Police Department

Fort Morgan chief: Report suspicious activity quickly

Abductions happen every 40 seconds in United States
By JENNI GRUBBS Times Staff Writer



Fort Morgan Police Chief Keith Kuretich
In light of multiple recent events concerning child abductions and attempts in Colorado, Fort Morgan Police Chief Keith Kuretich wants local residents -- both adults and children -- to know they can and should report to police any suspicious activity that they observe.
That suspicious activity can include vehicles lurking or circling in neighborhoods or near schools, adults following kids or teens and anything else that seems out of place or wrong to the observer.
This request from the chief comes after multiple reports recently of attempted child abductions in the Denver metro area, around Colorado and in Wyoming, including one Sunday night in Aurora, which law enforcement there said likely was unrelated to other abduction attempts.
Also, the recent disappearance of 10-year-old Jessica Ridgeway, from Westminster, and then the subsequent identification of her body last Friday near Arvada, tugs on many local hearts and minds, including law enforcement officials and residents.
After much searching by law enforcement and volunteers, that case ended in a mixture of tragedy and only a slight measure of closure for her family and everyone who followed the case since her disappearance. Law enforcement officials continue searching for her killer and pursuing leads, according to official statements.
And in Fort Morgan, police were investigating reports of suspicious activity Oct. 12 near Baker Central School, according to Kuretich.
The chief told the Fort Morgan City Council and residents watching the council meeting on public access cable about the reports from Baker students about a red minivan driven by a middle-aged Hispanic male, possibly with a tattoo on his arm, that had been seen near the school and around town multiple times, and at least once with a student running away from it.
While the students were not able to give more specific information about the driver of the minivan or whether any attempts at abduction were made, the police were investigating the report, Kuretich said.
"It's really important that these kinds of suspicious activities are reported, and we certainly applaud the students for doing just that," Kuretich said. "When they saw someone acting suspiciously, they informed an adult, notified a school official, as well as the police."
Act fast
While not all such reports end in arrests or even police contacts with potential suspects, every report of such suspicious activity is taken seriously and investigated, he said.
"Acting quickly is critical," the chief said.
The reason for this can be found in the stark statistics that Kuretich shared with the Fort Morgan City Council last week:
Every 40 seconds, a child becomes missing or is abducted somewhere in the United States.
In 2001, 840,279 people, both adults and children, were reported missing to the FBI's National Crime Information Center.
"The first step in protecting your child from potential abductors is to know what you're dealing with," the chief said.
Out of all of those missing people, 85 to 90 percent likely were children, according to information from the FBI that Kuretich shared.
However, the FBI also reported that most of these cases were resolved within hours, he said.
Still, he said it's important for people to know that reporting things that seem suspicious to police can help.
Fort Morgan police can be contacted through the department's administration line, 970-542-3930, to make reports, or people can call 911.
Kuretich and City Manager Jeff Wells stressed that people would not get in trouble for calling 911 to report suspicious activity to police.
"If somebody sees something in their neighborhood that is suspicious, call 911," Wells said.
And Kuretich urged people calling to make such reports to "try to get as much detail as possible" to give to police, and to "call as soon as possible."
Missing local teen
One disappearance from Fort Morgan is still a mystery after seven months of investigation, according to police.
Fort Morgan resident Kayla Chadwick, now 18, remains missing. She was last seen on March 27.
There is an active investigation into her case, and police are still looking for any tips or information the public can provide.
Investigators from multiple law enforcement agencies have followed up on numerous leads across the state and even out of state, according to police. Police have completed numerous interviews and have investigated all tips they have received. And several searches have been conducted around the Fort Morgan area where Kayla was last seen.
Crime Stoppers and private citizens have contributed to a reward fund that totals $7,500 for information that leads to the return of Kayla Chadwick. Information can also be given anonymously by calling Crime Stoppers at 970-542-3411. Tips can also be submitted online atcityoffortmorgan.com by following the Crime Stoppers link on the left side of the home page.
More statistics
Another thing Kuretich said was important for the public to know is that there are three specific types of kidnapping that can lead to disappearance: by a relative, which makes up about 49 percent; by an acquaintance, 27 percent; and by a stranger, 24 percent.
Family kidnapping is committed primarily by parents, involves more female kidnappers, occurs more frequently to children under age 6, equally victimizes juvenile girls and boys, and most often originates in the home.
Acquaintance kidnapping involves a comparatively high percentage of juvenile perpetrators, has the largest percentage of female and teenage victims, is more often associated with other crimes (especially sexual and physical assault), occurs at homes and residences, and has the highest percentage of injured victims.
Stranger kidnapping victimizes more females than males, occurs primarily outdoors, victimizes both teenagers and school-age children, is often associated with sexual assaults with female victims and robberies with male victims (although not exclusively so), and is the type of kidnapping most likely to involve the use of a firearm.
Other national statistics that Kuretich shared included:
Only about one out of each 10,000 missing children reported to the local police is not found alive. However, about 20 percent of the children reported to the National Center for Missing and Exploited Children in nonfamily abductions are not found alive.
In 80 percent of abductions by strangers, the first contact between the child and the abductor occurs within a quarter mile of the child's home.
Most potential abductors grab their victims on the street or try to lure them into their vehicles.
About 74 percent of the victims of nonfamily child abduction are girls.
And acting quickly is critical. Seventy-four percent of abducted children who are ultimately murdered are dead within three hours of the abduction.
The Fort Morgan Police Department also offers tips for keeping children safe.
--Contact Jenni Grubbs at jgrubbs@fmtimes.com.
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